Many of the world's billionaires are getting older - and plotting what's next
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This was published 3 years ago

Many of the world's billionaires are getting older - and plotting what's next

​Lorenzo Servitje Sendra was the oldest person on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index when he died last month with a $US4.2 billion fortune.

Thinking ahead, the Mexican billionaire had already transferred his stake in Grupo Bimbo, the world's largest breadmaker, to his heirs, enabling them to sidestep what amounts to a $2.1 trillion ($2.8 trillion) headache for the wealthy.

That's the total net worth - roughly equal to the gross domestic product of India - controlled by the 218 billionaires over age 70 on the Bloomberg index, a daily ranking of the world's 500 richest people.

"By far the biggest handover ever to the next generation is about to happen," PWC and UBS noted in a 2016 report on billionaires. "Without careful planning, many of today's fortunes will suffer substantial erosion."

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The 86-year-old Warren Buffett has pledged to give almost all of his $US79 billion fortune to charity.

The 86-year-old Warren Buffett has pledged to give almost all of his $US79 billion fortune to charity.Credit:Bloomberg

The problem is most acute in the US and Europe, where about a quarter of the billionaires on the index are age 80 or older, compared to 20 per cent in Asia.

In mainland China, where only chemical maker Xu Chuanhua has reached that milestone, just 3 per cent of the wealth is in the hands of the elderly, with about 40 per cent held by billionaires under age 50.

Russians have their own version of the headache, with private wealth controlled mostly by a generation of businessmen who profited from the chaotic post-Soviet economy. For those billionaires, passing the business on isn't an option when so much of the value is tightly woven into personal connections at the Kremlin.

In the US, Sumner Redstone's $US3.8 billion fortune became embroiled in a bitter and public feud when the 93-year-old's frail health sparked a legal battle between his daughter Shari Redstone and Viacom's former chief executive Philippe Dauman, hobbling the media company's efforts to make deals to stream programs on the internet.

Sumner Redstone's $US3.8 billion fortune became embroiled in a bitter and public feud.

Sumner Redstone's $US3.8 billion fortune became embroiled in a bitter and public feud.Credit:Getty-Images

Swedish billionaire Ingvar Kamprad and Germany's Dieter Schwarz side-stepped that risk through elaborate, tax-friendly holding structures they created to control assets when they're gone.

Italian billionaire Leonardo Del Vecchio, 81, sold Luxottica Group, the eyewear business that makes up the bulk of his $US18 billion fortune, to Essilor International in January. That was to prevent a tug-of-war among his children for control of Luxottica as Del Vecchio looks to transfer his wealth to the next generation.

Then there is the Buffett approach. The 86-year-old Berkshire Hathaway chairman is the world's second-richest person and has pledged to give almost all of his $US79 billion fortune to charity, a move that's been followed by 156 of the world's richest people, including No.1, Bill Gates.

Bloomberg

Without careful planning, many of today's fortunes will suffer substantial erosion.

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